The presidential candidate posted a graphic saying 81 percent of white victims in the U.S. were killed by blacks.
The Republican frontrunner claimed Muslims in New Jersey cheered 9/11, defended the beating of a black protester, and circulated false and racially-charged crime stats. And that was just since Friday.
The real-estate tycoon made his reputation by building glorious structures—so why is he threatening to shutter houses of worship?
The girl-power movement has taken back embroidery—and Clinton’s 2016 campaign is capitalizing on it.
Asked how ideas he has endorsed would be different from Nazi enrollment of Jews, the Republican frontrunner simply said, “You tell me.”
That’s right: a maximum wage.
Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton are both speaking about the terror group Thursday, but neither really wants to—each for very different reasons.
Don’t count on it.
Candidates have long used coded language to capitalize on subtle prejudices in the electorate—but will it work in 2016?
Bush’s mentality on terrorism still dominates the GOP. America needs an alternative vision.
A primer for Marco Rubio
After Friday’s terrorist attacks in Paris, the three rivals showed their weaknesses along with their strengths.
Voters who came hoping to hear solutions to their economic worries mostly left disappointed.
GOP candidates love it for what it represents, not because it’s good policy.
A substantive discussion in Milwaukee left much of the field unchanged—but a couple candidates managed to boost their fortunes.